Java™ Enterprise Edition Courseware

The Java Enterprise Edition or Java EE is a widely used platform for server programming in the Java programming language. The Java EE differs from the Java Standard Edition (Java SE) in that it adds libraries which provide functionality to deploy fault-tolerant, distributed, multi-tier software, based largely on modular components running on application servers.

Java EE includes several Application Programmer Interface (API) specifications, such as JDBC, RMI, JavaMail, JMS, web services, XML, etc, and further defines how to coordinate them. Java EE also features some specifications that are unique to Java EE for components. These include Enterprise JavaBeans, Servlets, JavaServer Pages and several web service technologies. This allows developers to create enterprise applications that are portable and scalable, and that integrate with legacy technologies.

The courseware listed on this page is intended to provide an overview of the major Java EE APIs. If you need courseware that covers the Java EE topics in more depth, please consult one of the following categories::

This 5 day course provides thorough coverage of the EJB3 technology - presented in a clear and effective manner. It starts with the basic concepts and APIs of EJB and then continues on with complex topics such as message driven beans and transactions

This 5 day course tells you what you need to know to design and build your own web applications. You'll learn the details of the key Java EE technologies and how to leverage the strengths of each, with special focus on Servlets and JSP.

This four-day course will help students navigate the alphabet soup that is the Java™ Enterprise Edition with chapters on: JSP, Servlets JSF, EJB, JMS, JPA, JTA, JAXB, and JAX-WS technologies. This course is current to Java EE 6 and was developed on the Glassfish Application Server and the Eclipse Juno IDE.

Information

Why buy from us

My account

Follow

All product names, trademarks, and registered trademarks used on ITCourseware.com are the property of their respective owners in the United States and other countries.
The Android Logo is reproduced from work created and shared by the Android Open Source Project and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 2.5 License.